8 BOTHRIEMBRYON. 



within, and more or less variegated ; outer lip simple arid acute, 

 colurnellar lip dilated above, white. 



Alt. 21.5, diam. 11.5, longest axis of aperture 12 mill. 



Alt. 22.5, diam. 11, longest axis of aperture, 11.3 mill. 



Alt. 28, diam. 13, longest axis of aperture, 13.4 mill. 



Alt. 30.5, diam. 13, longest axis of aperture, 14.5 mill. 



Alt. 1, diam. ^ inch (Gray). 



Western Australia : King George Sound, abundant on the hills in 

 the vicinity of Bald Head (King, Quoy and Gaimard, Masters). 



Bulimus Jcingii GRAY, Ann. of Philos. (n. ser.) ix, 1825, p. 414. 

 REEVE, Conch. Icon. pi. 51, f. 336 PFR., Monogr. ii, p. 174; 



iii, p. 410; iv, p. 468; vi, p. Ill; viii, p. 148 Cox, Monogr. 



Australian Land Shells, p. 75, pi. 13, f. 7 Helix kinyii WOOD, 

 Index Testae., Suppl., pi. 7, f. 27. Bulimus (Liparus) kingii Gray, 



E. A. SMITH, Proc. Malac. Soc. London, i, p. 95 Helix trilineata 



QUOY and GAIMARD, Zool. Voy. Astrolabe, ii, p. 107, pi. 9, f. 1-3 

 (1832). Bulimus trilineatus DESHAYES in Lam., An. s. Vert, viii, 



p. 248; in Per. Histoire, pi. 150, f. 11, 12 REEVE, Conch. Icon., 



pi. 59, f. 397; pi. 48, f. 310 PFR., Monogr., ii, p. 174; iii, 412; 



iv, 471 ; vi, 114; viii, 152 M. E. GRAY, Figs. Moll. Anim. pi. 



74, f. 2 (copied from Quoy) Bulimus sayi PFR., P. Z. S. 1846, p. 

 114. REEVE, Conch. Icon., pi. 65, f. 458. B. quoyi Cox, Catal. 

 Australian Land Shells in coll. J. C. Cox, M. D., p. 23, based on 

 Helix trilineata Quoy (1864). Orthalicus quoyi Cox, TAPPARONE- 

 CANEFRI, Viag. ''Magenta," p. 87. 



Much more elongated than B. inflatus, melo, and the allied forms, 

 the diameter and long axis of aperture being about half the total 

 length of the shell. The exceptionally large, high, and very finely 

 pitted nepionic shell is characteristic. No subspecies can be dis- 

 tinguished with present knowledge, but there are several well- 

 marked variations. 



Figures 21 to 26 represent the typical form, of which B. trilineatus 

 (figs. 25, 26, type) and B. sayi (fig. 24, type) are synonyms. It 

 varies chiefly in the number and intensity of the stripes, which vary 

 from deep chestnut to translucent gray. 



Fig. 29 is drawn from a King George Sound specimen (Dr. Cox's 

 collection) of a straw yellow color, varied only by a small dark 

 umbilical crescent. 



Fig. 27 represents a large specimen from King George Sound 

 {Cox collection), which is quite swollen, not tapering, below. 



